Now I wish the dream was boring again. But this wishing doesn't stop the sound from filling out, unmistakable footsteps landing slow but heavy through the walls. I turn my head--the rustle of hair over the pillow loud enough for the whole hotel to hear--and keep my eyes on the door. Just enough space to slip a note under but it gapes wider even as I watch it. A hand could fit through now. An entire arm, reaching up to the doorknob to let itself in.

But when there's something to see it's not a hand or an arm but bare feet. The skin pale orange in the antique light.

Then I do just as I would likely do in real life: close my eyes and hope it goes away. But it doesn't. It's too real. It is real.

That's why I'm pulling back the sheets, sitting up on the edge of the mattress with eyes locked on the bottom of the door. The feet disappeared from view now; I'm up too high and the angle's changed. But the sound is clearer. A living thing that knows I'm here, waits for me to stand and go to the door.

And then I'm standing and going to the door. My own steps far louder over the floor than whatever waits for me in the hallway although I'm barefoot as well, frozen bones that can no longer feel where the air stops and floor starts.

Hold my ear flat against the wood. My breath a tuneless whistle up through my throat, tight as a straw.

And another's from the other side. A low, sickening rattle.

So cold.

The liquid clack of tongue. Words so unclear they don't even sound as words do but I'm still certain what they are.

Watch as my arm drifts away from my side. The fingers snapping back the bolt, pulling the door open wide and closing my eyes against the staggering wash of frigid air. At once acrid and sweet, bushels of cotton candy thrown onto a fire.

And a woman.

Standing in the middle of the hallway wearing nothing but a moldering hospital gown with holes rotted through to the body beneath. Her face broken open, envelopes of skin hanging across the dull ivory of her skull. Water still dripping off the long strings of her hair and down her stomach, her knees, collecting in a greasy pool around her feet. Stepping forward to take me in.

Hold me.

Raises her arms and her body enlarges to fill the door frame. Then her mouth. A space the size of my fist, and wider. The size of my head. A mouth stretched to break into laughter or a scream that beads my face with the bitter moisture from her lungs.

Close my eyes and wish it away. But again it's not my wishing that does anything, but a voice. Here in this room where I'm asleep, calling myself out from inside the mirror, from what you know can't really be there but is there nevertheless.

chapter 25

Both the quiet of Murdoch's streets and the more or less steady rain that's fallen upon them over the preceding weeks are interrupted on the morning of the first day of trial. As soon as I turn outside the doors of the Empire to walk up to the courthouse I can see the clog of vans with satellite dishes rigged up on their roofs parked out front as well as an orange tarpaulin shelter that's been erected on the lawn to protect the TV reporters' hair from the wind. Two of them out there already, one man and one woman standing next to the war memorial that lists the bronze names of the local dead. Both applying hair spray, daubing at black-heads with makeup-smeared cotton pads, and snapping orders at clipboard-holding assistants. Still, now that I'm up here I can see that only a couple stations have decided to make the trip. Maybe the Lost Girls story has been losing momentum in the editorial boardrooms where such things are decided. Or maybe it's been replaced with some other garish tale, one better able to deliver compelling visuals, violent details, and isn't so inconveniently far from downtown.

Even though I'm wearing my barrister's robes and swinging a heavy leather document bag at the end of my arm, neither of the primping reporters seems to notice my arrival. And that's fine with me. I've been instructed by Bert that the best approach in this case is to lie as low as possible. ''Don't give the fuckers anything'' were his exact words. ''They'll only turn whatever you say around and make it worse for us.'' His ''us'' left me with the distinct impression that he meant ''me and Graham.'' Nevertheless, it was probably good advice no matter whom it was meant to serve, and as I bound up the front courthouse steps and push open the main oak doors I'm fully prepared to ''No comment'' my way through the throng of hacks and photographers waiting in the marble mezzanine for their first glimpse of Bartholomew Christian Crane, the Young Turk they've come all the way up here to see if he's got what it takes.

But there's nobody there. Just a couple of robed lawyers laughing to themselves, their clients following uncertainly behind them, and a janitor buffing the floor with one of those machines with spinning cotton mop heads that hover silently back and forth. In fact the only ones who look my way as I walk down the hall to Courtroom 109 are the whiskey-faced regulars sitting on the benches, eyes bleary with hangover, wondering if I was to be the one to try and put them away for longer than the last time.

Inside, the courtroom gallery is half full: Mr. and Mrs. McConnell straight backed in the front row immediately behind Goodwin's table; Brian Flynn on his own in the back at the farthest point from the McConnells he could find; Doug Pittle with a notepad teetering on his crossed legs; Laird Johanssen grinning over at me proudly as though he'd just released a prodigious fart; a half-dozen members of the press, three crime reporters I recognize from the Toronto dailies who, as is their habit, sit one behind the other, making too much noise.

With a ''Good morning'' to Goodwin I take my place at the defense table and arrange the contents of my document bag around me like a fortress. Then we all wait. And when the clerk's voice finally booms ''All rise!'', enough time has passed in silent tension that I can feel the entire courtroom jolt back to full consciousness and stand on legs weakened by being crossed too long. All watch the judge come in and take her position in her high- backed chair, and by the time she grumbles a ''You may be seated,'' maybe ten seconds after being told to stand, it's as though we couldn't have held ourselves up a moment longer, as all our asses crunch simultaneously back down on padded chair and wooden bench.

Then from a side door Tripp is brought in, shuffling over to his seat next to mine, his ankles polyester sticks in iron shackles. Once Tripp is seated, the bailiff removes them and hooks them to a metal clasp on his belt.

''How are you doing, Thomas?'' I whisper over to him, and he manages to turn, part lips coated white with unrinsed toothpaste, and whisper, ''Yes.'' Yes to what? I'm not about to ask.

The jury is then ushered in from a door on the opposite side and the twelve of them, more bewildered by the feel of their clean-shaven faces and laundered clothes than the unfamiliar surroundings, take their places in the box. Some look Tripp's way, squinting him into focus, but most keep their eyes on the bench. From her elevated seat Goldfarb scans the room, peering over our heads as though trying to find her husband at a cocktail party.

''Members of the jury, today is the first day of the trial for which you will serve as jurors for as long as this proceeding requires. Before you hear any of the Crown's witnesses and, if they elect to call any, the defense's witnesses, you will first hear opening submissions from both counsel. I must instruct you that the things they will say today are not statements of proven fact. What you will hear today is just argument, theories of what did or did not happen in relation to the accused. So just sit back, keep an open mind, and try to pay attention. Okay? Now, without further ado, Mr. Goodwin, are you prepared to deliver opening submissions for the Crown?''

''I am, Your Honor.''

''Then we're all ears.''

Goodwin lifts himself out of his chair, places his fingertips on the table's edge to feel where it is in case he needs it. Nods once to the bench, then turns to face the jury, taking a few seconds to look directly into each of the twelve sets of eyes that goggle back at him.

''We live in a society of advanced technology. Of TVs with two hundred channels, computers that can speak to each other, even genetic cloning. And I can tell you, every scientific and technological resource available to human-kind was employed in the search for Ashley Flynn and Krystal McConnell. But it still

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